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elem3nt

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Posts posted by elem3nt

  1. (I'm applying to liberal arts colleges)

    You're getting way ahead of yourself if you're already thinking about grad school. Don't. You'll change by the time you graduate.

    The job market will be very different in 10 years, so speculating about job prospects now is an exercise in futility.

    If you want to get a Ph.D. to get a job, don't. The only reason to get a Ph.D. is because you love the subject.

  2. What about working on a paper with complex features like citations, auto-numbered, tables, figures, table of contents, etc.?

    Also, has anyone used the iPad for a math/physics course with a lot of equations? From my limited experience the iPad's capacitive screen is too clunky and insensitive for something like this, especially compared to pen + paper and scanning it in.

  3. For current grad students (especially life science): do you have any free time during the week or on the weekends? Or are you in lab all the time? What is it like compared to undergrad?

    I'm doing a Ph.D. in biophysics next year. My free time has eroded to nothing over the course of my undergrad, and I've gradually given up my social life, hobbies, and most recently, adequate sleep. You know the feeling of having something always looming over your head.

    More practically, I have a lot of money invested in a hobby (cycling) but haven't even touched my bikes for the last semester (I've been busy with an UG thesis, research, tutoring, grad school interviews, writing intensive classes, blah blah blah... the typical undergrad BS). I'm wondering whether it'll always be this way from now on, in which case I should just accept the fact, sell everything, and move on.

  4. Thanks for the advice. I have been finding out the hard way about this stuff and have the following advice for anyone out there:

    Thoroughly know the rules concerning class attendance and read everything on your syllabus about the make-up policy before talking with your prof. Have a copy of both when you go to discuss your absence/rescheduling assignments, and be prepared to argue them like a lawyer. Additionally, get a letter from your dean (again, before talking with your prof) explaining your absence. You want as much firepower as possible on your side. Not everyone is as thrilled as you about missing class to go interview.

  5. Even though they are official/excused absences, has anyone had conflicts with professors over absences for graduate school recruiting visits? I.e. being pressured to cancel interviews?

    I have 7 interviews and will miss a LOT of class. Should I inform my profs of the interviews all at once or gradually, a week before each interview?

  6. People tend to be very negative about job prospects, especially on the internet. I have heard a mix of opinions IRL, with postdocs generally being the most negative and professors (any rank) being the most positive. From what I have gathered, your job prospects are highly influenced by whose lab you worked in and what connections your PI has - thus, things are probably very different for the PhD who got his degree from a no-name lab at Big State U and goes around trolling the internet on how bad the job situation is than for someone who got his degree in a trendy/hot topic lab at a top university.

  7. Columbia (Pathobiology & Molecular Medicine): Feb 3-5

    Harvard (Neuro): Jan 19-22

    Northwestern (Neuro: NUIN): Jan 19-20, Feb 2-3, Feb 23-24

    University of Chicago (BSG): Feb 23-25

    UCLA ACCESS (Molecular and Medical Pharmacology): Dec 22

    UPenn (Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics): Jan 19-21, Feb 9-11

    UPenn (Neuro): Jan 20, Feb 10

    U Wisconsin - Madison (Biophysics): Mar 1-3

  8. Should I just talk about specifically what kind of research i would like to do in depth and mention couple of professors whose work are in line of my interest?

    No no no - you are getting this completely wrong! Although your research interests are the most interesting thing in the world to you, the adcom is looking for evidence through your past experiences that you are prepared for grad school and couldn't care less about your research interests (as long as they broadly fit the research at the school).

    Ditto on what others have said about shortening the personal statement.

  9. In my personal statements I kept the balance 2/3-3/4 past research experiences that prepared me for grad school, 1/3-1/4 future research interests. I am just an undergrad in the sciences, but my professor told me that research interests often change during grad school (even among those who were certain of what they wanted to do) and thus you should keep the research interests section short. Therefore, you are getting it wrong. Shorten your research interests and integrate that with why you want to study there. Expand the section on your background - remember, background is definite and concrete, and you want to demonstrate that you will do well and not fail or flunk out of grad school. Harsh as it may seem, what you are interested in has little bearing on this.

  10. well, as an undergrad / masters student, i was lucky enough to join a productive lab in a hot field. i had my own project that i published as a first author (over a couple of years, of course) and a couple of side projects that gave me a second and middle author paper (in a much shorter timeframe). after i finished my masters i joined another productive lab where i got another second author. also, most postdocs / PhD students i've met in my field have put out many more papers than i have, so this might be field specific, too.

    neurogirl is correct for the most part, it's just a combination of luck and circumstance. i had good advisors who put me in charge of my own project while letting me contribute to others, too. i also worked in fields where major discoveries were only recently recognized (think 2000s nobel prizes). sometimes this happens, but i can't say much else other than this.

    That makes sense. Most grad students at my institution (Big state U) put out 3-4 papers in their PhDs, and an entire lab might get 2-3 science/nature/cell papers in a decade (i.e. it is a really big deal). I did summer research at a top 10 institution and was amazed at the difference in lab climate - papers were flying off the press straight to Science and Cell. I guess I should just get used to the dominant role of chance in determining who is successful in science, and start looking for those kind of "hot topic" labs.

  11. From interactions with grad students and PIs, I get the feeling that it generally isn't worth it. A prof is more interested in recruiting from the pool of admitted grad students than someone who hasn't even been admitted yet. Your interests could change once you reach grad school, and even if they don't, there are 2-3 other profs whose research you are interested in at that school (right? B)). Finally, profs say they receive hordes of these types of emails every day.

    Overall it won't hurt but the overwhelming chances are you will be ignored, making the effort spent in drafting the emails not worth the potential reward.

  12. The SOP is a statement of your professional goals, research interests, and relevant academic background. Name all the nitty-gritty details, be cold and incisive, and leave emotions out of it.

    In the personal history statement you can talk more about how you came to be interested in the field and personally what value you will get out of a grad program. You can be more emotional and say "I want to make the world a better place," even though grad schools just want papers.

    At least that's how I'm approaching it.

  13. I suspect the purpose is 1) for the school to figure out who it's competing against and 2) to tell them what kind of applicant you think you are (i.e. is this particular school a long-shot, or are the other schools the same caliber as the one you're applying to?)

    In either case it is expected that people will apply to multiple schools, and so you should answer the question truthfully. It is not a trick question.

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